The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930, June 16, 1927, Page Page Five, Image 3

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    ftiurVday, Juno 16, 1&1
THE MAWIN TIMES -
TP
Auction Sale !
The following list of arllcUl will be sold at the Ed. Mathews
rr Pin Grove en Saturday, June IS, In addition to tha main ad
vertised llitl
4 Spooli Wiro (naw,) 1 Table, Cook Stove, Cooking Outfit, Tabla,
Bugfjr, Fruit Jan, 15-Callon Cat Drum, Axai, Wadgat, Crottaut
Sawi, Grub Hoa, Maul, Adi Bicycle, and other article to nuttier-
out to mention.
R. IRL. DODGE
WAPINITIA,
PERSONAL MENTION
Bute Ehattuck transacted business
t Wamic on Monday.
(I')or((o Tlllotson mado a trip, to
The Dalle on Tuesday.
Carl Pratt and family spent Sun
day at the home of C. E. Pratt at
Wamic.
0. L. Paquet of Waplntia was
trading with Maupln merchant thia
fmorning.
o
J Miss Velma Crofoot la a guest of
I icr cousin, Margaret Mugill, at Wa
r mlc thin week.
V J. u. Campbell came over irom
Wamic lust Saturay after a loud of
freight for A E. Lake.
Estcil Stovall visited with his (la
ter, Mm. Lloyd Woodside at Wapln
Itla a couple of days last week.
Thoa. Connolly transacted busi
ness In Shaniko Tuesday, going to
that place as conclusion of a trip to
Portland.
o
Bert Appling and family went to
The Dalles Tuesday, leaving their
Criterion ranch to the mercy of the
neighbors for the time being.
Dr. El wood took time from his
patients and motored to Tort
land last Saturday, returninjj on
Tuesday.
Hugh Wood passed away a
few hours in Maupin on Monday,
coming over from his bhady
L. C. Hennejfh en and wife mo
tored to The Oalles Monday
morning, Lew going over on a
business mission. ,
Job Crabtree arived home
Monday evening, having com
pleted the job of work ho went
to Tortland to do.
Cliford McCorkle was in town
from his father's mnch Monday.
The young man is a student at
0. A. C. and is home for his sum
mer vacation.
0. P. Webcrg and family went
to The Dallca last Saturday. Mrs.
Wtberg went for medical treat
mcnt While the girls sought the
services of a dentist while at the
county seat.
Frank Stangland and family
came over from their Madras
ranch on Monday and visited
with the latter's sister, Mrs. L.
V. Broughton, and family, a day
or so the first of the week.
EAST MAUPIN NEWS
Clifford Allen and family spent
Sunday with friends t East Maup
pin. John Munnion is taking a
days' lay-off from his duties
sheep. " f
few
with
Jim Ruslc went to Dufur last Fri
day for the purpose of having dental
work done.
o (
W. E. Hunt has the shearers at
work on his flocks at his corrals
near the 0. W. depot.
o
Clark Richardson and wife and
v,t Aauhtr. Mrs. 0. J. Williams,
spent Sunday fishing at Two
Springs.
Mrs. Rex New and Mrs. Lester
Crofoot visited with friends in East
Maupin Saturday last, coming from
Two Springs.
Johnny Karlen waa in East Mau
pin yesterday, having left his sheep
ranch for the purpose of coming to
town to do some trading.
Andy Mann, who has been work
ing at Hunt's all season, is in town
and is slightly under the weather,
taking a laf-of f for that reason.
OREGON
Mra, L. I). Kelly and daughter,
Doris, left Sunday morning for Cor
vallis, Mm, Kelly going as chaperon
to the club members who will attend
the summer course there.
The MIkm!S Genevievo und Ade
lino Secthoff came down from Me
tolius and spent Sunday with their
father. They also took In the rodeo
at Tygh Valley that day.
Verne Fischer accompanied Geo.
Morris to The Dulles Monday 'night,
they going down for the purpose of
attending the doings put on by The
Dulles Legion post
Frank Lamborn wife and family
of Wasco passed through East Mau
pin recently while on their way for
an outing and filing trip. Mr.
Lambom was ut one time a home
steader in this vicinity.
Attended Birthday Celebration.
Dr. Elwood went to The Dalles
last Saturday and on Sunday assist
ed In celebrating the birthday of his
wife The two sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood, Ogden and Darrell, were at
home for the event, and in the after
noon the family went ' to White
Salmon, where the visited for a
time with Mrs. Elwood's parents.
Doctor Elwood returned to Maupin
Tuesday evening.
Maupin v. Tygh Sunday.
The Stubble Jumpres and the
much touted Tygh Valley baseball
team will engage in a game for
supremacy on the Maupin diamond
next Sunday. Tygh has cleaned up
all the teams hereabouts and will
come here with the expectation of ,
taking the Stubble Jumpers in. If
they do or don't the game promises
to be a hard fough one, and if our
people want to see real baseball
played they should turn out to the
comnig game.
Want To East Lake.
Bates Shattuck and wife left early
this morning for Eapt Lake, where
they went after the big trout The
road to the luke has recently been
opened, and Bates wanted to get in
ahead of the throngs jxpected there
soon. The Shattucks expect to be
gone four days.
Drove To Monmouth.
Leonard Farlow drove to Mon
mouth Tuesday afternoon and when
he returned wns accompanied by
1 Mla Florence Mathews who Is at-
tending the normal jthool there, and
who came home for the summer va
cation
Indian Teacher Transferred.
Miss Anna P. Shea, who has been
teaching in the Indian school at
Simnasho, left for Council Bluffs,
Iowa, yesterday. Miss Shea has
been transferred to the Winnebago
Indian reservation in Iowa and will
serve as instructor in the schools
at that placo hereafter.
Veterinary Called In.
Dr. Lawrence S. Stovall was call
ed to Tygh Valley yesterday morn
ing to administer to the ailment of
a rancher's cow.
Attended Family Reunion.
Raymond and Earl Crabtree, the
former taking his family with
him, attended the annual reunion
of the Crabtree Clan at Scio on
Sunday. Andrew and Newton
Crabtree had preceeded the boys
and also were at the reunion.
That was an affair which ha
been duplicated for a number of
years and is always attended by
many of the family from various
parts of the country.
Supplying Road Camps.
Ernest Webb, who lately open
ed a store at Tygh Valley, is
hustling for trade and getting
it. He lately closed a contract
whereby he will supply some of
the road camps on the Wapinitia
cut-off with all the meat, grocer
ies and vegetables required. . He
makes twice a week trips to the
camps. - '
Subscribe to Tho Maupin Times.
Brought In Slrawrerrlei.
F. C. Butler drove his truck to
Portland Tuesday and last evening
returned with a load of 119 crates
of "Improved Oregon" strawberries.
The fruit was grown beteween Ore
gon City and Portland and Is the
finest lot of short cake filling ever
brought to Maupln,
Oregon News Note
Low bid for grading 8 miles on
Mt. Hood Wapinitla road is $51,
108. Pendleton First fat cattle ship
ments, start month earilicr than us
ual. Salem Permit issued for $200,
000 Hawkins and Roberts hotel, 111
rooms.
Newbcrg Repairing Willamette
River bridge will cortt $27,760.
i
Bend Great Northern Railroad
buys 23 miles of Shcvlin-Hixon log
ging railroad.
Oregon has 160,000 goats, 23,
In Lane and 33,000 f in Douglas
counties.
Contract made to grade Baker
Medical Springs road for $35,700.
Oregon City P. E. P. Company
$1.25 bath salts, while they lost
at 75 cents each, at the MaupinJ
Drug Store.
will spend $50,000 on new car line
service.
Hood River Pear crop estimated
at 600 cars, the same as in 1926.
Klamath Falls New Troy laundry-Matthews
brick building will
cotit $20,000.
rendleton Fife street paving
jobs contracted for about $50,000.
Vale Eastern Oregon land com'-
!pnoy and Oregon-Eastern Colonbta
Uion company will sign reclamation
contracts for excess acreage to start
leuerai prujevu
Baker Good gold strike reported
In Carpenter Hill district, and mill
may be built to treat free ore.
Taft New hoted, The
opens on Roosevelt highway.
Pines,
Don't fai to attend the big
dance at Legion hall Satur
day night and thus help in a
worthy cause. Good Music
and Good Eats. Come out.
COLLEGE POULTRY FARM
CIVES POULTRY REMINDERS
Items of Interest to Ererjr Poultry
Raiser About Hatching and
Care of Chickens
Green feed for poultry is cut fine
in a feed-cutter and fed In a. green
feed hopper. In a hopper it stays
together and remains succulent
much longer than when thrown upon
the floor or into the yards and scat
tered around by the fowls.
A catching coop is of use on the
poultry farm when fowls are treated
for lice, vaccinated for cluckenpox,
or when culled, graded or moved. It
saves labor and less danger of Injur
ing the fowls.
A can or barrel large enough to
hold a week's supply of grain in each
poultry-pen eaves time and labor. A
slonting top preventes the fowls from
roosting on it.
Poultry meat is canned by many
Oregon housewives and with simple
methods a good tasting meat pre
serve is made. By the following
method a 2-pound dressed fowl gives
about 1 pint of solid meat and 1 pint
of jelly.
The raw meat is taken from the
bones and cut up so it will go into
the Jars easily. It is packed tightly
in cleaned!, tested, glass jars to 1
inch of th3 top. A half teaspoon of
salt and seasoning is added, but no
water. Covers with new rubbers are
placed lightly on the jars. Then the
jars are put into a tightly covered
container, like1 the presure canner
of steam cooker, but a washboiler
or sapbucket will also do. The
vater is heated to 4 boilding fAnt
and the meat sterilized 4 to 5 l'ours.
Before taking the cans from the
sterilizer ,then are tightly sealed,
when these jars are stored in a dark
and coo3 place the meat k remains
good fen a long time.
Oooro-ooooooooooooooooO
o PICKJED. UP ABOUT TOWN o
Oooo'ooooooooooooooooO
"Ktir"h TJsfov K.iva l.hat. Ante-
lnnn n' jinrl snrtinn work do
not jibo with each other. SO het Mr. Kaisers niece, Him Fran
is taking a few days off fromi Kaiser, of Washougal, who came
his iob of tamnine ties on a to Maupin with them and who will
down river section. During hi3
leisure time "Stub" is learning
the Ins and ouls of pinochle.
Who will stand for election to
the school board at the meeting
called for Monday, June 20, If.
hard to say. Several Maupimtcs
have been approached regarding
their acceptance, but in every
instance have declined to make
the run. O. B. Derthick has
been endorsed by school pa
trons living in the Bakeoven
section, and if elected "Obie"
would make a good oficial.
Ben Fralev in not in favor of
an ant-cigarette law. On Sunday
last he sold ten cartons of the
little smokes, not counting the
coughs which accompanied each
package.
If you enjoy a good time danc
ing and the acompanying good
eats, do not fail to attend the I
dance given by the Ladies' Aux-;
ihary to the American Legion
pout of this place on Saturday
evening. The cost is but a plunk
and it insures at least a five
spot worth of pleasure.
X
Clarence I'lyler has branched j
out as a regular promoter of i
entertainments. He has inched-j
uled a race meet at Grass Valley j
for this week, the 18th and 19th,
and has several dances and pic
ture shows billed. His shows
and dances at. the fair grounds
last Saturday and Sunday were
well patronized and all attending
got their money's worth.
When a "champion" bronco
rider refuses to ride a certain
horses it looks as though his
championship claims but little
weight. Jesse Stahl, Who claim3 j
himself "champion colored rider
of the world." could not be in
duced to fork "Tygh Valley," the j
little backing mare at the rodio
at the fair grounds on Sunday.
lTtrovnt Wilann rrni rf inn
!, &t Tygh ghe
raised at Dufur, and he says she
is developing into one , of the
most successful buckers in the
business.
John Confer is something of
a champion himself when it
comes to shearing sheep. The
last day of shearing at Fargher's
last week John "humped" him
self and divested 81 woollies of
their coats. When that had
been completed John lusted an
other chew of Climax and de
clared himself ready for another
flock to shear.
x I
'Now that the East side is to
have water, from the Staats
spring, Lester Kelly and a force
of diggers are laying the . pipes to
the other side.
Maupin is on the "Juice" line
again, after about ten days in
darkness. With the fixing of
the burned-out generator those
of cur people who cook with
juice and those who operate ma
chinery with electris power, are
enabled to go ahead with work
that was halted by a small flash
of lightning last Monday.
(Omitted Lest Week)
If there is one thing more than
another' John McMillan is possessed
of it is pure grit. With his hip
rcarely out of the splints John has
been at work with sheep, climbing
down and up canyons walls. Mon
day morning he took a band acroos
the big Bakeoven canyon, penned
them, then gave out H was two
hours making the trip on nerve
alone.
-x- -We
always like to be apprised of
doings of people in this district, but
when we are given a story as being
true we expect that truth. Last
jweek we were handed a tale con
cerning a "strike at Connollys'"
which had npt a resemblance of
truth attached to it. It was a
rumor,, pure and simple, and as a
consequence The Times was placed
in a wrong light. If you have news
to give us, please make sure it is
authentic.
Our article in last week's paper
seems to have stirred up some of the
gas dealers in Maupin. While it
is true the "gas war" almost died
abornin' still the story did not meet
with the approval of other dealers
in gasoline in this city.
X r
Brought Daughter Home.
Mr. and Mrs. II.. R. Kaiser drove
to Portland Tuesday and there met
their daughter, Miss Winifred, who
has been attending the University
! of Oregon at Eugene
They also
remain as their guest for a fort-
! night,
Bigjpeleb
Tygh Valley
Sunday-Mond'y
JULY
$400 G
HOUSE RACES OF ALL KINDS
FOOT RACES FOR EVERYODY
' SNAPPY BASE BALL GAMES
Aeroplane iStunts
Flying Daily by L. M. Boyd of Portland in his Lin
coln Special. This type of machine was used by Capt.
Lindbergh in his Flight to Paris.
Shows arid Dancing;
IN THE PAVILION EACH EVENING
Free
Admission to Grounds
Children under
TAKEN UP
Came into my enclosure in the
fall of 1924 one bay mare. Weight
about 1100 pounds; about 15 years
old. Branded "CI" on right
shoulder and "J" on left shoulder.
Has wire cut on right front foot;
left hind foot white. White star on
forehead. Has range volt at side at
this time. Owner is notified to call,
identify and prove ownership, pay
charges, or mare will be sold for her
her keep. Sale will be held at my
place on Saturday, July , 23, 1927.
Dated Maupin Oregon, June 16,
1927. '
32-t4 M. I. SHEARER
NOTICE
OF ANNUAL
MEETING.
SCHOOL
Notice is hereby give nthat the
legal voters of School District No.
84 of Wasco 'county, State of Ore
gon, that the annual schoo meet
ing of said District will be held at
the High School building, Maupin,
to begin at the hour of 2 :00 o'clock
p. m., on the third Monday in June,
being the 286th day of June, A. D.
1927. '
This meeting is called for the pur
pose of electing one director to
serve three years, and a clerk to
Crandall Undertaking Co.
-QUIET
The Dalles, Oregon.
O-
-LADY ASSISTANTS-
V 7
Grass Valley, Oregon
Saturday June 18
Sunday, June 19
All kinds of Horse Races. Baseball Games. Horses
from Wasco, Sherman and Gilliam Counties.
DANCE' CARNIVAL
Race Admission 23c-50c C. M. PLYLER Man'gr
ration
Fair Ground
4
.50 Cents
J2 years free.
serve one year. -
- Dated this 3rd day of June, 1927.
H. R. KAISER
Chairman Boad of Directors.
Attest:
GEO. A. TILLOTSON
District Clerk '
CLASSIFIED LOCALS
TO TRADE A 19$2 Buick Six au
tomobile, in good conitdion. Eight
5 good tires and tubes; looks like
new. Will trade for cows or b.if
' ersy or will sell for $200 cash.
E. W. Ashley,
SO-tl Sherara Bridge,' Ore.
FOR SALE A four-burner Bon
Ami oil stove and an all steel crib
bed.. Both are in good condition. '
Price for stove. $12.00; for crib,
15.00. Call Mrs. Dave Wilson.
- 30-t2
FOR SALE Wood timber at $1.00
per cord. Call R. R. Dodge,
Linn's mill, six miles southwest of
' Wapinitia. t 30-t2
FORD FOR SALE 1923 model
Ford touring car, reconditioned,
for sale at $150.00. Good rub
ber and in good shape all around.
See it at the Maupin Garage.32-tl
BINDER FOR
Art Gutzler.
SALE Inquire of
32-tl
SERVICE -
Phone 35-J
--0-
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